Study Hard Flashcards

1
Q

What is ADP 1?

A

The Army

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2
Q

What is ADP/ADRP 7-0?

A

Training Units and Developing Leaders

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3
Q

What is ADP/ADRP 1-02?

A

Operational Terms and Military Symbols

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4
Q

What is ADP/ADRP 2-0?

A

Intelligence

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5
Q

What is ADP/ADRP 3-0?

A

Unified Land Operations

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6
Q

What is ADP/ADRP 3-07?

A

Stability

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7
Q

What is ADP/ADRP 3-90?

A

Offense and Defense

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8
Q

What is ADP/ADRP 4-0?

A

Sustainment

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9
Q

What are the three training domains the Army uses?

A

Institutional, Operational, Self-Development

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10
Q

Who must train as a combined Arms team?

A

Individuals, teams, sections and units

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11
Q

Why does the Army train?

A

The Army trains to provide ready forces to combatant commanders worldwide.

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12
Q

What does training in units focus on?

A

Improving unit, soldier and leader proficiencies

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13
Q

What is essential to unit readiness and successful deployments?

A

Competent and Confident leaders

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14
Q

What must collective training be?

A

Relevant, rigorous, realistic, challenging, properly resourced

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15
Q

Who are the primary trainers of enlisted soldiers, crews and small teams.

A

Non-Commissioned Officers

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16
Q

What do leaders need to ensure their organization meets mission requirements?

A

Leaders need to know and enforce standards.

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17
Q

What does training multiple tasks concurrently do?

A

Preserves valuable time while capitalizing on the opportunity to train related tasks at the same time

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18
Q

What does most Leader Development occur?

A

During Operational Assignments

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19
Q

What is the definition of a METL?

A

METL is the doctrinal framework of fundamental tasks for which the unit was designed.

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20
Q

What is one of the most important elements of military forces ability to communicate when conducting operations?

A

A common set of doctrinal terms and military symbols.

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21
Q

How does the Army community develop a common language of terminology and symbology?

A

Through the standardized Doctrine Development Process

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22
Q

What are the Unframed Military Symbol Categories?

A

Control Measure and Tactical Task Mission Symbols

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23
Q

What does the intelligence war-fighting function provide commanders?

A

Provides the commander with intelligence to plan, prepare, execute and assess operations

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24
Q

What are three information collection tasks?

A

Plan Requirements and Assess Collection, Task and Direct Collection, Execute Collection

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25
Q

What are the four steps of the Army’s Intelligence Process?

A

Plan Direct, Collect, Produce, Disseminate

26
Q

What does PED stand for?

A

Processing, Exploitation and Dissemination

27
Q

What is processing and exploitation?

A

Conversion of collected information into forms suitable to the production of intelligence

28
Q

What does METT-TC stand for?

A

Mission, Enemy, Terrain and Weather, Troops and Support Available, Time Available, Civil Considerations.

29
Q

What is the foundation of Unified Land Operations built on?

A

Initiative, Decisive Action and Mission Command

30
Q

How does the Army Seize, Retain and Exploit the initiative?

A

By striking the enemy both lethally and non lethally

31
Q

What is seizing the initiative?

A

Setting and dictating the terms of action

32
Q

From and Enemy point of view, what must US Operations be?

A

Rapid , Unpredictable and Disorienting

33
Q

What are the types of Offensive Operations?

A

Movement to Contact, Attack, Exploitation and Pursuit

34
Q

What do shaping operations do?

A

Create and preserve conditions for the success of Decisive Operation

35
Q

Why is it important for units to operate in depth

A

It makes army forces resilient

36
Q

What is the intent of Stability?

A

To create a condition so the local population regards the situation as legitimate, acceptable, and predictable

37
Q

During what phase of operation should stability be used?

A

Offense, Defense and stability should be used simultaneously

38
Q

What must commanders do to prepare for Stability?

A

Identify these sources instability which if not addressed often lead to violence

39
Q

What is tactics?

A

The employment and ordered arrangement of forces in relation to each other

40
Q

What do tactical operations always require?

A

Judgment and Adaptation to unique circumstances

41
Q

What provides commanders with a set of tools to use in developing a solution to a tactical problem?

A

Tactics, Techniques and Procedures

42
Q

What is an Engagement?

A

A tactical conflict usually between opposing lower echelon maneuver forces

43
Q

What are two things inherent in Tactical Operations?

A

Uncertainty and Risk

44
Q

What makes Combat one of the Most Complex Human Activities?

A

Combat is characterized by violent death, friction, uncertainty and chance

45
Q

What is the main feature of the offensive task?

A

Taking and maintaining the initiative

46
Q

What is tempo?

A

The rate and speed for which a unit operates in respect to the enemy

47
Q

What is an attack?

A

Offensive task that destroys and defeats enemy forces, seizes and secures terrain or both

48
Q

What are some attack types?

A

Ambush, Counter Attack, Demonstration, Spoiling Attack, Feint and Raid

49
Q

What are the forms of Maneuver?

A

ENVELOPE, Flank, Frontal attack, infiltration, penetration, turning movement

50
Q

What is the key feature of Decisive Battle?

A

Striving to regain the initiative for the attacking enemy

51
Q

What are the Three Basic Defensive tasks?

A

Area Defense, Mobile Defense and retrograde

52
Q

Three forms of Retrograde?

A

Delay, Withdrawal and Retirement

53
Q

Three forms of Defense

A

Linear obstacle, Perimeter Defense, Reverse Slope Defense

54
Q

What are 3 major elements of sustainment?

A

Logistics, personnel services and health services

55
Q

What is logistics?

A

The planning and executing of the movement and support of forces

56
Q

What are principles of sustainability?

A

Integration, anticipation, responsiveness, simplicity, economy, survivability, continuity and improvisation

57
Q

What is Unified Action?

A

The synchronization, coordination and integration of activities

58
Q

What does generating forces consist of?

A

Army organizations whose primary missions are to participate in combat integral supporting elements

59
Q

When does sustainment support to populations occur?

A

During stability tasks and defense support of civil authorities

60
Q

What is operational reach?

A

The distance and duration in which a unit can successfully employ military capabilities